4.6 Article

Self-Adaptation of Pseudomonas fluorescens Biofilms to Hydrodynamic Stress

Journal

FRONTIERS IN MICROBIOLOGY
Volume 11, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

FRONTIERS MEDIA SA
DOI: 10.3389/fmicb.2020.588884

Keywords

Pseudomonas fluorescens; biofilms; extracellular matrix; mechanical properties; computer simulations; NMR; active matter

Categories

Funding

  1. UCM/Santander grant [PR26/16-10B]
  2. Sara Borrell fellowship - Spanish Ministry of Health [CD18/00206]
  3. Juan de la Cierva fellowship
  4. Marie Sklodowska-Curie Fellowship [748170 ProFrost]
  5. [PGC2018-097903-B-100]
  6. [FIS2017-83706-R]
  7. [FIS2016-78847]

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Under hydrodynamic stress, bacteria can adapt by increasing cell density and matrix production in biofilms. This adaptation leads to the formation of mechanically stable biofilms with a higher number of crosslinks and enriched carbohydrate compositions in the matrix, affecting both structure and viscoelastic properties.
In some conditions, bacteria self-organize into biofilms, supracellular structures made of a self-produced embedding matrix, mainly composed of polysaccharides, DNA, proteins, and lipids. It is known that bacteria change their colony/matrix ratio in the presence of external stimuli such as hydrodynamic stress. However, little is still known about the molecular mechanisms driving this self-adaptation. In this work, we monitor structural features of Pseudomonas fluorescens biofilms grown with and without hydrodynamic stress. Our measurements show that the hydrodynamic stress concomitantly increases the cell density population and the matrix production. At short growth timescales, the matrix mediates a weak cell-cell attractive interaction due to the depletion forces originated by the polymer constituents. Using a population dynamics model, we conclude that hydrodynamic stress causes a faster diffusion of nutrients and a higher incorporation of planktonic bacteria to the already formed microcolonies. This results in the formation of more mechanically stable biofilms due to an increase of the number of crosslinks, as shown by computer simulations. The mechanical stability also relies on a change in the chemical compositions of the matrix, which becomes enriched in carbohydrates, known to display adhering properties. Overall, we demonstrate that bacteria are capable of self-adapting to hostile hydrodynamic stress by tailoring the biofilm chemical composition, thus affecting both the mesoscale structure of the matrix and its viscoelastic properties that ultimately regulate the bacteria-polymer interactions.

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